7,840 research outputs found
Design and finite element mode analysis of noncircular gear
The noncircular gear transmission is an important branch of the gear transmission, it is characterized by its compact structure, good dynamic equilibration and other advantages, and can be used in the automobile, engineering machine, ship, machine tool, aviation and spaceflight field etc. Studying on the dynamics feature of noncircular gear transmission can improve the ability to carry loads of, reduce the vibration and noise of, increase the life of the noncircular gear transmission machine, provides guidance for the design of the noncircular gear, and has significant theories and practical meanings. In this paper, the gear transmission technique is used to studied the design method of the noncircular gear, which contains distribution of teeth on the pitch curve, designs of the tooth tip curve and the tooth root curve, design of the tooth profile curve, the gear system dynamics principle is introduced to establish dynamics model for the noncircular gear; basic theory of finite element and mode analysis method are applied, finite element model for the noncircular gear is established, natural vibration characteristic of the noncircular gear is studied. And the oval gear is taken as an example, the mathematics software MathCAD, the 3D modeling software UG and the finite element software ABAQUS are used to realize precise 3D model of the oval gear. The finite element method is used, the natural vibration characteristic of the oval gear is studied, the main vibration types and natural frequencies of the oval gear and that of the equivalent cylindrical gears are analyzed and compared, the conclusions received reflect the dynamics performance of the oval gear, and solid foundation is laid for dynamics research and engineering application of the oval gear transmission
Design and analytically full-wave validation of the invisibility cloaks, concentrators, and field rotators created with a general class of transformations
We investigate a general class of electromagnetic devices created with any
continuous transformation functions by rigorously calculating the analytical
expressions of the electromagnetic field in the whole space. Some interesting
phenomena associated with these transformation devices, including the
invisibility cloaks, concentrators, and field rotators, are discussed. By
carefully choosing the transformation function, we can realize cloaks which are
insensitive to perturbations at both the inner and outer boundaries.
Furthermore, we find that when the coating layer of the concentrator is
realized with left-handed materials, energy will circulate between the coating
and the core, and the energy transmits through the core of the concentrator can
be much bigger than that transmits through the concentrator. Therefore, such
concentrator is also a power flux amplifier. Finally, we propose a spherical
field rotator, which functions as not only a wave vector rotator, but also a
polarization rotator, depending on the orientations of the spherical rotator
with respect to the incident wave direction. The functionality of these novel
transformation devices are all successfully confirmed by our analytical full
wave method, which also provides an alternate computational efficient
validation method in contrast to numerical validation methods.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
Study on the interaction between CaO-based sorbents and coal ash in calcium looping process
Calcium looping (CaL), implemented via cyclic carbonation and calcination of calcium-based sorbents, is a novel and promising technology in reducing emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere. The reactivity of CaO is important in calcium looping, but its CO2 sorption will be affected by the presence of ash deriving from coal combustion in the calciner. We report here, the investigation of influence of coal-derived ash on CaO-based sorbents using a thermogravimetric analyzer and a combination of other techniques. As a result of this work, our understanding of the role of several key variables (sorbent type, ash content and its particle size, the calcination conditions) and how they interact during repeated cycles of CO2 sorption and desorption, has been greatly enhanced. Furthermore, an attempt was made to explain the interaction mechanism between sorbents and coal-derived ash. It is proposed that the blockage of pores blow 3 nm due to ash deposition and subsequent grains agglomeration are the main reason for CaO-based sorbents' loss in CO2 carrying capacity
Current Oscillations, Interacting Hall Discs and Boundary CFTs
In this paper, we discuss the behavior of conformal field theories
interacting at a single point. The edge states of the quantum Hall effect (QHE)
system give rise to a particular representation of a chiral Kac-Moody current
algebra. We show that in the case of QHE systems interacting at one point we
obtain a ``twisted'' representation of the current algebra. The condition for
stationarity of currents is the same as the classical Kirchoff's law applied to
the currents at the interaction point. We find that in the case of two discs
touching at one point, since the currents are chiral, they are not stationary
and one obtains current oscillations between the two discs. We determine the
frequency of these oscillations in terms of an effective parameter
characterizing the interaction. The chiral conformal field theories can be
represented in terms of bosonic Lagrangians with a boundary interaction. We
discuss how these one point interactions can be represented as boundary
conditions on fields, and how the requirement of chirality leads to
restrictions on the interactions described by these Lagrangians. By gauging
these models we find that the theory is naturally coupled to a Chern-Simons
gauge theory in 2+1 dimensions, and this coupling is completely determined by
the requirement of anomaly cancellation.Comment: 32 pages, LateX. Uses amstex, amssymb. Typos corrected. To appear in
Int. J. Mod. Phys.
-mixing matrix elements from lattice QCD for the Standard Model and beyond
We calculate---for the first time in three-flavor lattice QCD---the hadronic
matrix elements of all five local operators that contribute to neutral -
and -meson mixing in and beyond the Standard Model. We present a complete
error budget for each matrix element and also provide the full set of
correlations among the matrix elements. We also present the corresponding bag
parameters and their correlations, as well as specific combinations of the
mixing matrix elements that enter the expression for the neutral -meson
width difference. We obtain the most precise determination to date of the
SU(3)-breaking ratio , where the second error stems from
the omission of charm sea quarks, while the first encompasses all other
uncertainties. The threefold reduction in total uncertainty, relative to the
2013 Flavor Lattice Averaging Group results, tightens the constraint from
mixing on the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) unitarity triangle. Our
calculation employs gauge-field ensembles generated by the MILC Collaboration
with four lattice spacings and pion masses close to the physical value. We use
the asqtad-improved staggered action for the light valence quarks, and the
Fermilab method for the bottom quark. We use heavy-light meson chiral
perturbation theory modified to include lattice-spacing effects to extrapolate
the five matrix elements to the physical point. We combine our results with
experimental measurements of the neutral -meson oscillation frequencies to
determine the CKM matrix elements ,
, and , which differ from CKM-unitarity expectations by about
2. These results and others from flavor-changing-neutral currents point
towards an emerging tension between weak processes that are mediated at the
loop and tree levels.Comment: 75 pp, 17 figs. Ver 2 fixes typos; corrects mistakes resulting in
slight changes to results, correlation matrices; updates decay constants to
agree with recent PDG update; corrects uncertainties for tree-level CKM
matrix elements used in comparison, slightly reducing tensions; includes
additional analyses that support mostly-nonperturbative matching; expands
discussion of isospin-breaking effect
Pairing in the iron arsenides: a functional RG treatment
We study the phase diagram of a microscopic model for the superconducting
iron arsenides by means of a functional renormalization group. Our treatment
establishes a connection between a strongly simplified two-patch model by
Chubukov et al. and a five-band- analysis by Wang et al.. For a wide parameter
range, the dominant pairing instability occurs in the extended s-wave channel.
The results clearly show the relevance of pair scattering between electron and
hole pockets. We also give arguments that the phase transition between the
antiferromagnetic phase for the undoped system and the superconducting phase
may be first order
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